Why the Caduceus Is Not the Symbol of Medicine
(And Why It Drives Me Nuts)
Author’s Note: I even have the Staff of Asclepius tattooed on my leg. That’s how deep this goes.
Let me get this off my chest once and for all:
The Caduceus — the one with two snakes and wings — is NOT the symbol of medicine.
It’s the staff of Hermes, the Greek god of commerce, thieves, and trickery.
Yes, you read that right — thieves and trickery. Perfect for corporate healthcare branding, maybe. But actual healing? Not so much.
🐍 The Real Symbol of Medicine: The Staff of Asclepius
Asclepius was the Greek god of healing and medicine. His staff:
🐍 Has one snake
🪽 Has no wings
📜 Was associated with real physicians, temples of healing, and early medical ethics
This is the symbol used by:
And pretty much anyone who paid attention in a medical humanities class
🪦 So Why Do We Keep Seeing the Caduceus?
Because in 1902, the U.S. Army Medical Corps accidentally adopted the wrong damn symbol.
Some well-meaning bureaucrat, probably half-asleep and distracted by shiny things, chose the caduceus because it looked “more official.” The mistake stuck. And now you can’t walk into a hospital, see a medical TV show, or browse scrubs on Amazon without seeing Hermes’ flying snake-stick.
😤 Why It Bugs Me
Because it’s wrong.
Because it dishonors the actual heritage of the healing profession.
Because Asclepius stood for care, learning, and healing, while Hermes was basically the patron saint of expedited shipping and confidence scams.
And once you know the truth?
You can’t unsee it. The caduceus is the Comic Sans of medical symbolism.
📸 See for Yourself
Above: my own tattoo of the Staff of Asclepius, below a comparison of the real medical symbol vs. the misused caduceus.
Left: The Staff of Asclepius (Medicine)
Right: The Caduceus (Hermes / Commerce)
🧠 Final Thoughts
If you see two snakes and wings, that’s not medicine. That’s marketing.
Look for one snake, one staff, and a nod to Asclepius, not Hermes.
It’s a small detail, but a meaningful one — and in medicine, the details matter.
.
